ASVAB Mechanical Comprehension Practice Test 100826 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.10
Score 0% 62%

Review

1 What's the mechanical advantage of a wedge that's 2 inches wide and 10 inches long?
83% Answer Correctly
8
7
5
15

Solution

The mechanical advantage (MA) of a wedge is its length divided by its thickness:

MA = \( \frac{l}{t} \) = \( \frac{10 in.}{2 in.} \) = 5


2 If the radius of the axle is 5 and the radius of the wheel is 6, what is the mechanical advantage of this wheel and axle configuration?
36% Answer Correctly
5
1
-1
1

Solution

The mechanical advantage of a wheel and axle lies in the difference in radius between the inner (axle) wheel and the outer wheel. But, this mechanical advantage is only realized when the input effort and load are applied to different wheels. Applying both input effort and load to the same wheel results in a mechanical advantage of 1.


3

A watt is the unit for which of the following?

71% Answer Correctly

work

mechanical advantage

energy

power


Solution

Power is the rate at which work is done, P = w/t, or work per unit time. The watt (W) is the unit for power and is equal to 1 joule (or newton-meter) per second. Horsepower (hp) is another familiar unit of power used primarily for rating internal combustion engines. 1 hp equals 746 watts.


4

The force exerted on an object due to gravity is called:

70% Answer Correctly

mass

weight

potential energy

density


Solution

Mass is an intrinsic property of matter and does not vary. Weight is the force exerted on the mass of an object due to gravity and a specific case of Newton's Second Law of Motion. Replace force with weight and acceleration with acceleration due to gravity on Earth (g) and the result is the formula for weight: W = mg or, substituting for g, weight equals mass multiplied by 9.8 m/s2.


5

Which of the following is not a modulus of elasticity?

47% Answer Correctly

stress modulus

stretch modulus

shear modulus

bulk modulus


Solution

The modulus of elasticity measures how much a material or structure will deflect under stress. Stretch modulus is longitudinal stretch (like stretching raw bread dough), shear modulus is longitudinal deflection (like the horizontal displacement of a stack of magzines when a heavy object is placed upon them), and bulk modulus is compression of volume (like the compression of a loaf of bread under a heavy can at the bottom of a grocery bag).